«When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, He said, ‘It is finished’…» John 19:30.
The ancient Greeks boasted in being able to say so much with so few words. That’s what happened when Jesus said just one word, but it was a word that shook the world — Tetelesti.
In John 19:30, Jesus cried from the cross, «It is finished.» In English it may be three words, but in Greek, it’s one word — Tetelesti. When Jesus died on the cross, there were some things that were completed, for the word means paid in full, completed, summed up in essence.
The Prophesies
When Jesus said, «It is finished,» He meant all of the prophecies had been fulfilled. You can see the prophecy in Psalm 69:2, «They gave me also gall for my meat and in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink.»
It is absolutely indescribably amazing as you study the prophecies that deal with the crucifixion of the Lord Jesus Christ. Just one such example is in Psalm 22. It reads as though the writer was standing at the very foot of the cross and yet it was written centuries before the Lord Jesus Christ was born. I would encourage you to read Psalm 22 again.
What’s the lesson for us? Just as surely and accurately as the prophecies concerning His first coming were fulfilled, just as surely and accurately those concerning His second coming are going to be fulfilled! There are two threads — the red thread of blood redemption and the golden thread of His second coming.
And if Jesus Christ fulfilled those first prophesies minutely, accurately, He’s going to fulfill all the others.
The Suffering
In uttering Tetelesti, He’s also saying the anguish and the heartbreak of the cross is finished. I don’t believe that you and I in our wildest imagination can begin to understand what Jesus Christ suffered upon that cross.
We can’t comprehend that upon the cross of Calvary, Jesus Christ paid for all of the sin for all of the world, for all of the time, for all of the eternity that any man, any woman, any boy, and any girl would ever have to pay.
Jesus Christ in six hours upon the cross suffered all the hell that you and I would suffer for eternity. For Jesus, being infinite, suffered in a finite period of time what you and I, being finite, would suffer in an infinite period of time. The eternities as well as the sin of the world were compressed upon the Lord Jesus Christ in that time.
But the cruelty of the cross was the final suffering. So many other ways He suffered even before He got to the cross — the Garden of Gethsemane, the mock trials, the spitting in His face, the beatings and mockings.
But it was not the physical suffering that redeemed us. At midday the glowing face of the sun hid and the shade of night and darkness was pulled. The veil was pulled across the sun symbolizing the greater spiritual darkness that Jesus was in. And Jesus gave those words from Psalm 22, «My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?»
Jesus Christ hung on that cross forsaken of God, deserted by man. Alone Jesus Christ died. He took my suffering, my shame, and my separation. He was separated from God the Father and while men jeered and taunted and God the Father turned His back.
I thank God He’ll never go to the cross again. But I want to tell you — once for all, forever and ever, He hath bought redemption for me and for you. It is finished.
The Way of Salvation
God’s mighty work of redemption was finished. When Jesus died, all that was necessary for you to be forgiven and to be saved was done. There’s nothing for you to do but to receive what Jesus Christ as already done, for it is finished.
You see, that’s why He came. Jesus said in Luke 19:10. «For the Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which is lost.»
You and I are the sinners, the criminals. You and I are the ones that had the sentence executed against us. But Jesus Christ took it out of the way and nailed it to His cross. And it is written, «It is finished.»
Every stain, every blot, every blur, every blemish that ever came across your soul, Jesus has done it all. And all you need to do now is to receive what He has done. Oh, it’s not what you do, my friend, it’s what He has done. Jesus Christ has purchased your salvation. Tetelesti, it’s finished.
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 8, 2021
The text of these extraordinary speeches is included, with a unique analysis of the delivery.
The author, a seasoned speaking coach and speechwriter, offers historical context, and cd’s to let the actual speeches come alive.
I recommend this beautiful book to historians, students, and anyone who appreciates history, and powerful words that motivate to bring people together.
Another publishing, to include 21st century notable speeches, is encouraged!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 29, 2003
Richard Greene does an excellent job presenting the historical context of these important 20th century speeches and then provides a blow-by-blow analysis of what makes them great. For those of us who were not born yet or were too young to appreciate Churchill, FDR, John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Albert Einstein and other great people of the 20th century this book is a wonderful way to go back in time and experience history. The book contains the full text of over 40 speeches and short excerpts from twenty of them on the two accompanying CDs.
My only complaint is that the excerpts on the CD are too short. For example, the excerpt from Martin Luther King’s «I have a Dream» speech is only 39 seconds long. This is probably the best speech of the 20th century — I would like to hear the whole thing. If the cost of producing the CDs is the reason for the short excerpts I would much rather hear the original speeches than the introductions by the book’s author.
I have no issues with the selection of the speeches. Yes, they are biased towards Americans, and some are perhaps there are better choices for a few of them, but with over 40 speeches included it is not a great loss to skip a few. Most of them are unequivocally great speeches and this book does a great job presenting them.
14 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 17, 2019
I just received my book, and did not get a chance to read it ….
It looks beautiful, and as I just leafed thru it, I can tell its going to be gem!
I look forward to absorbing this book…
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 11, 2018
Beautiful coffee table book. The CD came with it and it was very inspiring. The book is a great read and a conversation starter for my living room.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 7, 2012
The book has some of the most important people who gave famous speeches these past 100 years. The author does an excellent job describing and analyzing each of the speeches. The book can help those who wish to advance their public speaking abilities.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 30, 2011
I teach an AP English Language course and this book is extremely helpful. The author has included entire speeches and has analyzed them, pointing what makes these speeches effective and memorable. This book is a must-have for teachers of rhetoric or anyone who appreciates the power of language.
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 24, 2017
Well done compilation. Check youtube for authors great TED talk
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 15, 2017
learn from some of the greatest orators.
Top reviews from other countries
5.0 out of 5 stars
Esattamente quello che volevo.
Reviewed in Italy 🇮🇹 on May 22, 2017
Mi serve per la tesina di maturità, ci sono 20 discorsi che hanno fatto la storia, i 3 che mi interessavano sono presenti e ben illustrati.
Chi me l’ha venduta ha lasciato anche qualche post it con annotazioni su dei piccoli errori del libro, che sebbene non ho verificato personalmente, non sono comunque errori gravi ma sottigliezze penso…
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Words that shook the world : or, Martin Luther his own biographer ; being pictres of the great reformer, sketched mainly from his own sayings
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- Adams, Charles, 1808-1890
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Words That Shook The World Or Martin Luther His Own Biographer: Being Pictures Of The Great Reformer, Sketched Mainly From His Own Sayings
This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world’s literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.
336 pages, Paperback
First published June 1, 2007
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Fifth Sunday after Easter
The Father Himself loves you.
On this last Sunday before the Ascension of Our Lord, Holy Mother Church reads to us that final discourse of Our Lord with His disciples, specifically the passage in which we are encouraged to lift up our minds and hearts with total confidence. Our Lord gives the reason, the fundamental, great reason for all our hope, a word that shook the world to its very foundations, causing the greatest spiritual revolution in human history, that word that none of the ancient philosophers who had arrived at the certitude of God’s existence could have imagined, that word which even the wisdom of Israel could not have expressed with such clarity. In it the Saviour bequeaths to the world the ultimate revelation, the astounding truth straight from the Heart of God: The Father Himself loves you.
We know that Jesus and the Father are equal, one in Divinity with the Holy Spirit. We know Jesus loved us to death, pouring out His life blood for us; we know that the Holy Spirit is poured forth as the love of God in our hearts. But when we hear Our Lord say, The Father Himself loves you, we feel something different. For the Eternal Father, the First Person of the Blessed Trinity, is the origin, the fount, the principal of the Godhead. Even though there is no question of His being first in time or in power – the Three Divine Persons are coeternal and perfectly equal –, it remains that the Father is the origin of all. And so when we hear those words, then it is that the truth really hits us: God Eternal, in whom, by whom, for whom all things exist, has literally loved us into existence. We did not have to be. We did not have to exist. God was eternally and infinitely happy in Himself. And yet, He so willed to share His bliss with us. He loved us. He loved us first. The Father Himself loves you.
What does this mind-boggling truth entail for us?
First and foremost, it confronts us. We can imagine the surprise, the consternation even, of the peasant girl, of lowly extraction, whom the king approaches to ask that she become the bride of his son. Is this a joke? Is it possible? Am I dreaming? No, we are not dreaming. The life of Christ is there, His resurrection from the dead is there. His Church is there. They prove to us without the shadow of a doubt that the Father loves us.
Secondly, it challenges us. Love can only be repaid with love. We are thus challenged to love in return this God who has loved us first. This is truly the heart of the Gospel. Will we love God? Will we prove by our deeds that we have the love of God in our hearts?
Thirdly, it moves us. Caritas Christi urget nos, says St Paul: the love of Christ compels us, it pushes us forward, it will not allow us to stand still, but is continually prodding us on to greater heights. When Aristotle developed his teaching on friendship, he was far from imagining that man could be friends with God. For Aristotle, it was not even conceivable. God, the First Mover, is so far removed from our world, that communication, let alone, affection for men is not possible. This idea of God holds sway still in the minds of many. The god is Islam is very much of that type, an unapproachable god with whom a relationship of love is unthinkable. Allah is master; he is not father; he makes slaves, not sons. And here lies the novelty of the Christian revelation. We are taken up into the very Godhead. We are sons of God. When a baby is baptised, he becomes adopted son of God; the life of the Holy Trinity takes up residence in his pure soul, and henceforth God will be drawing that child deeper into the mystery of divine friendship. Blessed is that child if he replies with generosity to God’s prevenient love.
Fourthly, the love of God has its demands over us. If you love me, keep my commandments, Our Lord tells us. If God has loved us first, and if we love Him in return, that love is going to prove itself by fidelity to the Commandments, to the Decalogue, to the great precept of charity, to that true religion of which St James speaks in today’s epistle: Religion pure and undefiled before God and the Father is this: To visit the fatherless and widows in their tribulation and to keep one’s self unspotted from this world. If we truly love God, that love will manifest in two great areas: helping those in need, and keeping oneself pure from worldly attractions and pleasures.
There is a fifth demand made on us by the love of God, and that is the one highlighted by Our Lord in today’s gospel: the precept of prayer. Ask and you shall receive. If you have come to know the love of God, if you have taken the measure of what it means; if you realise that God is destining you to eternal life with Him; if you are aware of the obstacles which lie in the way (the world, the flesh, the devil), then you will be insistent and constant in asking for His Grace through prayer.
And that is why the Church gives us this week the Rogation Days. The first three days of the week which lead up to Ascension Thursday, we will dedicate to extra prayers and fasting in order to implore from the divine bounty all those things of which we stand in need, for ourselves, our families, our region, our country, our world. Those needs are multiple, and they are varied. But above all, we must not forget that the great grace we must ask for at all times is the grace of eternal salvation. St Augustine makes that clear concerning the words of Our Lord: Whatever you ask the Father in my Name, He will give it. If we ask for the goods of this world only, we are like the man referred to by St James in the epistle: If a man be a hearer of the word and not a doer, he shall be compared to a man beholding his own countenance in a mirror: for he beheld himself and went his way and presently forget what manner of man he was. If we know God’s law and do not keep it; if we know that we are destined to eternal life and are more preoccupied with worldly goods, we have forgotten who we are.
But if we know who we are, if we are conscious of our dignity of sons and daughters of God, then we make bold to ask in the Name of Jesus for those things which lead to our eternal salvation, and we are certain that they will be granted, for the Father who loves us, wants nothing more intensely than to welcome us into His eternal home.
This week, let us pray through the intercession of Mary Help of Christians, whose solemnity we will celebrate next Sunday, that she may bless this country and turn all hearts to our Blessed Saviour to see and realise how much they are loved by God.